Pre‐contact and post‐colonial ecological legacies shape Surinamese rainforests

Author:

Witteveen Nina H.1ORCID,White Cheryl2,Sánchez‐Martínez Barbara A.1,Philip Annemarie1,Boyd Femke1,Booij Roemer1,Christ Reyan1,Singh Santosh2,Gosling William D.1ORCID,Piperno Dolores R.34ORCID,McMichael Crystal N. H.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecosystem and Landscape Dynamics Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam Amsterdam Netherlands

2. Department of History, Faculty of Humanities Anton de Kom University Paramaribo Suriname

3. Department of Anthropology Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Washington DC USA

4. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Ancon Panama

Abstract

AbstractDisturbances in tropical forests can have long‐lasting ecological impacts, but their manifestations (ecological legacies) in modern forests are uncertain. Many Amazonian forests bear the mark of past soil modifications, species enrichments, and fire events, but the trajectories of ecological legacies from the pre‐contact or post‐colonial period remain relatively unexplored. We assessed the fire and vegetation history from 15 soil cores ranging from 0 to 10 km from a post‐colonial Surinamese archaeological site. We show that (1) fires occurred from 96 bc to recent times and induced significant vegetation change, (2) persistent ecological legacies from pre‐contact and post‐colonial fire and deforestation practices were mainly within 1 km of the archaeological site, and (3) palm enrichment of Attalea, Oenocarpus and Astrocaryum occurred within 0, 1, and 8 km of the archaeological site, respectively. Our results challenge the notion of spatially extensive and persistent ecological legacies. Instead, our data indicate that the persistence and extent of ecological legacies are dependent on their timing, frequency, type, and intensity. Examining the mechanisms and manifestations of ecological legacies is crucial in assessing forest resilience and Indigenous and local land rights in the highly threatened Amazonian forests.

Funder

WGF

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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